
opposite—that the 12 names are disputed names. See Exhibit G. In short, Vogel
‘mocked up’ a letter to create false evidence against the position and rights of the
receivership parties, in an effort to support Sherman’s sale of Petfinders.com in a
private, non-auction sale for $25,000.00.
5
Background of Sherman-Vogel and the Receivership
In September 2010 the Ondova bankruptcy estate had some $2,000,000.00 in
cash and only around $900,000.00 in claims— ie., more than a million dollar
cash surplus. This was achieved when Baron agreed for Ondova to take all of the
settlement proceeds in the global settlement because he was promised by the
Ondova chapter 11 trustee (Sherman) that:
“[I]f I were going to be entering into this settlement agreement,
that … once the creditors were paid, that there would be a
significant amount of money that was left over, that would come
back, that would stay, you know, in a company that I would have
at the end of the day. … I was told that obviously if you look at
the settlement agreement, I individually am not getting any, a
penny from it myself. … the settlement agreement was that
Ondova was going to be able to walk away out of the bankruptcy,
after it paid its creditors, with a large amount of cash, and we
were thinking maybe even a million dollars.”
Barons testimony before the Bankruptcy Court on 9/15/2010.
Doc 470, Page 95 in Ondova Bankruptcy (case no. 09-34784-sgj11).
Sherman should have immediately closed the Ondova bankruptcy in
September 2010 when there was the MILLION DOLLARS CASH surplus.
Sherman’s counsel let the truth slip out in the District Court, admitting “The
5
“Petfinders.com” has been appraised at $2,000,000.00 to $6,000,000.00.
Case: 10-11202 Document: 00511655466 Page: 13 Date Filed: 11/04/2011